LR is very different to LRC, make sure you understand the differences before you commit. If you do want to store your original images in Adobe's cloud you need to import them into LR (not LRC). This is useful if you want to view or edit your photos on a mobile phone or tablet, but it WILL NOT keep your original files safe! LRC will only upload smart previews and they don't take any of your default 20GB cloud space. Important.you can't store your original images using LRC in the Adobe cloud. Also, do those folks that use the cloud storage also keep local backups or do you trust Adobe's cloud to be "bulletproof?" Also, if anybody went from Apple Photos to LR, I'd appreciate any thoughts re the two over extended use. I would appreciate any info/advice/thoughts/suggestions re: LRC or LR (I tend to think LRC) and recommended amount of cloud storage. OTOH, there are extensions available that will do that in conjunction with Photos though it's not as elegant as having that capability within the actual program. Of course, I could have cloud storage through Apple and, TBH, there is only one thing in LRC that I would regularly use that is not available in Photos - perspective correction. Of course, if I have my own backups, I don't see any reason to store in the cloud and PAY for that 'privilege." Currently my main computer is a 27" iMac with 2TB of external HD storage BUT for 6 months of the year I am not where my main computer is located and do all photo work on my 16" MacBook Pro. That made me very wary of storing anything valuable there unless I had my own backup locally (which, in that case, I did not). This past week I downloaded a trial version of LRC and was pleased with it so I'm considering that 'rental.' □īut a few years back I lost 200 pages of text I had written that was "secure" in the cloud. However, Lightroom has been around for years now and, while I thought Aperture was better back then, times have changed and obviously, a LOT of people are very happy with LR(C). As far as no longer supporting a product - I recall Apple Aperture which I thought was the best photo program around at the time. I have always refused to pay a monthly fee for software that, at any moment, the seller could stop supporting, change the monthly fee, or drop their storage/raise the storage price. I'm trying to get my head around 'renting' software.in this case Lightroom Classic.
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